Pacific Northwest Generating C v. Bpa

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2009
Docket09-70228
StatusPublished

This text of Pacific Northwest Generating C v. Bpa (Pacific Northwest Generating C v. Bpa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Northwest Generating C v. Bpa, (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING  COOPERATIVE; BLACHY-LANE COUNTY COOPERATIVE ELECTRIC ASS.; CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC.; CLEARWATER POWER COMPANY; CONSUMERS POWER INC.; COOS-CURRY ELECTRIC COOP., INC.; DOUGLAS ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE; FALL RIVER RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC.; LANE ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC.; LOST RIVER ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC.; NORTHERN LIGHTS INC.; OKANOGAN COUNTY ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC.; RAFT RIVER RURAL ELECTRIC No. 09-70228 COOPERATIVE, INC.; SALMON RIVER  BPA No. ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC.; 06-PB-11744 UMATILLA ELECTRIC; WEST OREGON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC., Petitioners, ALCOA, INC.; AVISTA CORPORATION; PUGET SOUND ENERGY, INC.; PACIFICORP; IDAHO POWER COMPANY; COLUMBIA FALLS ALUMINUM COMPANY, LLC, Intervenors, v. BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION; DEPT. OF ENERGY, Respondents. 

11957 11958 PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA

PUBLIC POWER COUNCIL,  Petitioner, AVISTA CORPORATION; PUGET SOUND ENERGY, INC.; IDAHO POWER COMPANY; ALCOA, INC.; COLUMBIA No. 09-70236  FALLS ALUMINUM COMPANY, LLC, Intervenors, BPA No. 06-PB-11744 v. BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION; DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, Respondents. 

INDUSTRIAL CUSTOMERS OF  NORTHWEST UTILITIES, No. 09-70988 Petitioner, v.  BPA No. 06-PB-11744 BONNEVILLE POWER OPINION ADMINISTRATION, Respondent.  On Petition for Review of an Order of the Bonneville Power Administration

Argued and Submitted July 7, 2009—Seattle, Washington

Filed August 28, 2009 PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA 11959 Before: Raymond C. Fisher and Marsha S. Berzon, Circuit Judges, and Barry Ted Moskowitz, * District Judge.

Opinion by Judge Berzon

*The Honorable Barry Ted Moskowitz, District Judge for the Southern District of California, sitting by designation. 11962 PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA

COUNSEL

Erick Johnson, Lake Oswego, Oregon, for petitioner Pacific Northwest Generating Cooperative.

Mark R. Thompson, Portland, Oregon, for petitioner Public Power Council.

Melinda J. Davison, Irion Sanger, Davison Van Cleve, P.C., Portland, Oregon, for petitioner Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities.

Karin J. Immergut, United States Attorney; Stephen J. Odell, Assistant United States Attorney; David J. Adler, J. Courtney Olive, Special Assistant United States Attorneys; Randy A. Roach, General Counsel; Timothy A. Johnson, Assistant Gen- eral Counsel, Portland, Oregon, for respondent Bonneville Power Administration.

Michael J. Uda, Doney Crowley Bloomquist Payne Uda P.C., Helena, Montana, for intervenor Columbia Falls Aluminum Company. PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA 11963 Michael C. Dotten, Lake Oswego, Oregon, for intervenor Alcoa Inc.

Jay T. Waldron, William J. Ohle, Sara Kobak, Schwabe Wil- liamson & Wyatt P.C., Portland, Oregon, for intervenors Paci- fiCorp et al.

OPINION

BERZON, Circuit Judge:

In Pacific Northwest Generating Coop. v. Dep’t of Energy (“PNGC”), 550 F.3d 846 (9th Cir. 2008), amended on denial of reh’g, No. 05-75638, 2009 WL 2386294 (9th Cir. Aug. 5, 2009), this court held invalid a central provision of a five-year contract between the Bonneville Power Administration (“BPA”) and the aluminum company Alcoa, Inc. (“Alcoa”). Less than a month after we issued the PNGC opinion, BPA announced that it and Alcoa had agreed to an amended ver- sion of the invalidated provision that would govern the nine- month period ending September 30, 2009 (the original five- year contract would have expired in September 2011). Peti- tioners Pacific Northwest Generating Cooperative (“PNGC”), Public Power Council (“PPC”), and Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities (“ICNU”) challenge BPA’s decision to execute the amended contract.

We agree with the petitioners’ challenge and therefore grant their petitions for review. Although under no obligation to contract with Alcoa, BPA agreed voluntarily to make a nearly $32 million cash “benefit” payment to the aluminum company, so that the company could purchase power from one of BPA’s competitors. BPA’s justifications for this unusual transaction, under which the agency received nothing directly in exchange for its $32 million, do not demonstrate that the transaction was “consistent with sound business prin- 11964 PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA ciples,” as required by BPA’s governing statutes. We there- fore hold that BPA exceeded its statutory authority when it agreed to the Alcoa contract amendment.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The PNGC Opinion

In PNGC, we invalidated a central provision of a five-year contract (the “2007 Contract”) between the Bonneville Power Administration and Alcoa, one of BPA’s Direct Service Industrial (“DSI”) customers. Under the invalidated provision, BPA had agreed to “sell” power to Alcoa at a mutually agreed-upon rate, below both the market rate and the statu- torily authorized Industrial Firm Power (IP) rate. See PNGC, 550 F.3d at 854-58. The provision at issue did not, however, require BPA to sell physical power to Alcoa. Rather, BPA had agreed to “monetize” the power sale by making cash “benefit” payments to Alcoa in an amount approximately equal to the difference between the higher wholesale market rate for power and the lower contract rate multiplied by the amount of power consumed by Alcoa each month.1 See id. at 854-55. The idea was that Alcoa could use the monetary benefit pay- ments to subsidize its purchase of power on the wholesale market, such that the aluminum company’s net power costs would be approximately equal to the agreed-upon contract rate (assuming that various caps on the monetary benefit were not triggered). See id.

We held this monetization provision invalid on the ground that “[t]he decision to monetize embodied in the agreements 1 The monetary benefit payments in the 2007 Contract were subject to several caps. For example, BPA agreed to pay no more than $24/MWh for each MWh of power that Alcoa consumed. Thus, if the wholesale rate for power exceeded the agreed-upon rate by more than $24/MWh, Alcoa was required to pay the overage. For a more thorough discussion of the various caps and relevant examples, see PNGC, 550 F.3d at 855 & n.11. PACIFIC NORTHWEST GENERATING v. BPA 11965 violated [BPA’s] statutory obligation[ ] . . . to provide ‘the lowest possible rates to consumers consistent with sound busi- ness principles.’ § 838g.” Id. at 875. We explained:

In essence, BPA has voluntarily agreed to forgo rev- enues by charging the DSIs a rate below what is authorized by statute (i.e., the IP rate) and below what is available on the open market. These fore- gone revenues result in higher rates for all other cus- tomers. This outcome is in apparent and direct conflict with BPA’s statutory mandate, see § 838g, and renders BPA’s decision to “monetize” the DSI contracts in an amount reflective of those underlying rate decisions — albeit a capped amount — highly suspect.

Id.

We then considered and rejected as “flawed” BPA’s three proffered justifications for this decision. Id. at 875-78. In so doing, we noted that “[b]y subsidizing the DSIs’ smelter oper- ations beyond what it is obligated to do, BPA is simply giving away money,” id. at 877, and that such an act was “not reflec- tive of a ‘business-oriented philosophy,’ ” id. at 878 (quoting Ass’n of Pub. Agency Customers, Inc. v. BPA (“APAC”), 126 F.3d 1158, 1171 (9th Cir. 1997)). We also explained that “BPA’s authority to sell power to the DSIs does not mean that BPA may simply give money to the DSIs by calling the agree- ment a ‘power sale’ with ‘monetized service benefits.’ ” PNGC, 550 F.3d at 878 (emphasis in original).

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